Circulation, Vol 78, 529-538, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
BF Vandenberg, KC Dellsperger, KB Chandran and RE Kerber
The usefulness of two-dimensional color-Doppler flow-imaging (2D Doppler)
in the detection, localization, and quantitation of bioprosthetic mitral
valve regurgitation is uncertain. Mitral bioprostheses, before and after
the creation of transvalvular (n = 33), paravalvular (n = 17), or combined
(n = 23) defects, were mounted in a pulsed duplication system (flow rates,
2.5-6.5 l/min; pulse rate, 70 beats/min). An Aloka 880 2D Doppler system
(Japan) was used to image the regurgitant jets in the simulated left atrial
chamber, analogous to images obtained with transesophageal
echocardiography. Jet area was corrected to an estimate of stroke volume:
2D Doppler measurements were divided by [(valve effective orifice area) X
(continuous-wave Doppler- determined mean diastolic filling
velocity)]/pulse rate. Regurgitant fraction and regurgitant volume were
measured by an electromagnetic flow probe. 2D Doppler correctly identified
the presence and location of paravalvular regurgitation. In transvalvular
and combined transvalvular-paravalvular defects, there were six incorrect
interpretations, all having transvalvular regurgitant volumes less than 4
ml/beat. In the presence of transvalvular regurgitation, jet area, length,
and width correlated linearly with regurgitant volume (r = 0.82, 0.80, and
0.68, respectively; p less than 0.0001) and regurgitant fraction (r = 0.62,
0.61, and 0.45, respectively; p less than 0.001). Correlations with
regurgitant fraction were improved when 2D Doppler measurements were
corrected for stroke volume (r = 0.78, 0.79, and 0.67, respectively; p less
than 0.0001). Mitral bioprostheses with transvalvular defects were also
studied at varying flow rates (3.2-7.5 l/min) and pulse rates (70, 90, and
110 beats/min). The correlation between jet area and regurgitant volume was
improved with a second- order polynomial regression (r = 0.93, p less than
0.0001). Our conclusions are that 1) in this in vitro model analogous to
transesophageal imaging, 2D Doppler accurately detects and localizes
bioprosthetic mitral valve regurgitation; 2) in transvalvular bioprosthetic
mitral valve regurgitation, 2D Doppler measurement of jet area has a
curvilinear relation with regurgitant volume, and correlation with
regurgitant fraction is improved with correction for stroke volume; and 3)
in paravalvular bioprosthetic mitral valve regurgitation, correlations
between 2D Doppler measurements and regurgitant volumes are weaker,
possibly because of jet eccentricity.
ARTICLES
Detection, localization, and quantitation of bioprosthetic mitral valve regurgitation. An in vitro two-dimensional color-Doppler flow-mapping study
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City 52242.
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